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Franklin D. Roosevelt accepted his party's nomination after the convention had closed. Shortly after midnight Eastern time on July 19, 1940, Roosevelt delivered his acceptance speech from the White House in front of news radio microphones and newsreel cameras. [20]
Roosevelt gave his acceptance speech to the Democratic National Convention. The president listed his reasons for running again and stated, "my conscience will not let me turn my back upon a call to service. The right to make that call rests with the people, through the American method of a free election.
In his acceptance speech, Roosevelt declared, ... In July 1940, Roosevelt appointed two interventionist Republican leaders, Henry L. Stimson and Frank Knox, ...
The 1940 State of the Union Address was given by the 32nd president of the United States, Franklin D. Roosevelt, on Wednesday, January 3, 1940, to both houses of 76th United States Congress. It was given after World War II had begun, but before the fall of France, and about a year before the United States entered the war.. He said, "You are ...
The 1940 Republican National Convention ... However, by the time the convention opened, Roosevelt was the clear Democratic nominee. ... Willkie acceptance speech at ...
Roosevelt delivered his acceptance speech remotely, from a Pacific Coast naval base. [4] This was the last time a major party presidential candidate accepted that person's nomination remotely for a period of 76 years until Joe Biden accepted his nomination in 2020 from a set in his home town of Wilmington, Delaware due to the COVID-19 pandemic ...
After McAdoo (who had been denied the nomination by the two-thirds rule at the 1924 convention) announced that California would back Roosevelt, the convention realized Roosevelt had reached the required 769.5 delegates to win the nomination, which was greeted by wild celebrations. Roosevelt received 945 votes on the fourth ballot to Smith's 190.5.
The title is taken from the speech Eleanor Roosevelt gave at the 1940 Democratic National Convention in hopes of unifying the, at the time, divided Democratic party. [1] No Ordinary Time was awarded the 1995 Pulitzer Prize for History. [2] Alan J. Pakula was working on a screenplay based upon the book at the time of his death in 1998. [3]